Cold Forming of Wheel Bolts PDF
Cold Forming of Wheel Bolts PDF
Cold Forming of Wheel Bolts PDF
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Cold forming of narrow tolerances demonstrated for truck wheel bolts. Dr. Gunther Hartmann Research & Development KAMAX-Werke, R. Kellermann GmbH & Co. KG
Introduction
Cost saving is an ongoing challenge in the automotive industry. Reductions in prices of more than 20 % over the last 5 Years are common for automotive suppliers. For the fastener industry, where total costs are mainly determined by material and labor costs, there is a limited range of possibilities to adopt the challenge. For even simple parts like fasteners according to ISO or DIN standards, highly sophisticated high volume production processes exist with little opportunities for cost saving. Facing the world wide competition these parts are economically difficult to produce in Europe any longer. However cold forming is a very efficient technology in comparison to machining processes such as grinding or turning. Higher production rates with reduced consumption of material are the major advantages while limited capabilities for narrow tolerances and somewhere restricted shapes are the major limitations. Further development has been initiated to overcome these drawbacks. In the following it will be demonstrated by means of an example, how the advantages of the technology can be used successfully.
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According to the application in general, this design addresses most of the drawbacks of the knurled bolt. The purely elastic deformation of the interference fit allows the bolts to be reuses even if they have been disassembled. That means, only one bolt dimension is necessary for the first application and the in-the-field service. Because of the undercut of the bolt, the corresponding bore can be machined without a chamfer minimizing the diameter of the bolt head but maintaining the under-head surface contact area. The lack of sharp teeth enables the use of this design even for aluminium flanges. The major disadvantage compared to the knurled bolt is the cost for this design. The additional grinding increases the cost for the bolt by approximately 20 % compared to the knurled version.
New Approach
In order to keep the advantages of this design, two questions had to be answered. Is it possible to process the interference fit section using cold forming processes with the required accuracy and what must an appropriate design then look like? In order to solve the problem, we had to answer the second question first and depending on the answer to solve the first problem. Cold heading is not capable of keeping the required tolerances. Moreover the ability to form undercuts is very restricted. On the other hand, thread rolling is a well known technology. By radial deformation, the material is forced to flow partially backwards forming larger diameters. However the accuracy of the tread rolling operation is not sufficient enough for interference fits. In order to achieve the required tolerance, a second, precise rolling operation had to follow, where the outer diameter of the previously rolled profile is deformed between flat tools acting as a calibration process. At the same time, the resulting shape incorporates an undercut section between head and profile, which is welcome for the present application. Depending on the application, the chamfer at the bore can be dropped. To apply these processes on the wheel bolt, the interference section had to be divided up into smaller areas. During a first attempt, a design with rings was tested. The interference section consists of a number of rings like a thread having no pitch. The process flow then consists of cold heading of the bolt, rolling the rings with standard accuracy, heat treatment, calibration at high accuracy and finally thread rolling. Depending on the requirements additional coating steps may be added. Studies have been performed on the capability of the calibration process. The results demonstrated in principal the ability to maintain the required tolerances. But the design shows significant disadvantages during the assembly of the bolt. While pressing the bolt into the bore, a strict angular alignment of the bolt with respect to the bore has to be observed. Slight deviations in the angular alignment cause scrapes within the bore caused by the sharp edges of the rings.
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precisely calibrated and finally the thread is rolled. Both steps are performed using two directly coupled CNC rolling machines. A process capability of better than 20 m for the calibration process could be achieved. The integrated process control automatically separates defective parts. This increases process quality for these safety-related parts.
Conclusions
Traditionally narrow tolerances e.g. for interference fits are produced using grinding processes. However cold forming is a very efficient technology, especially for high volume parts. By consequently adopting the design due to the demands of cold forming and further refining the calibrating technology to achieve process capability even for narrow tolerances, cost reductions could be achieved with the same or enhanced properties compared to their predecessors. This has been demonstrated for a wheel bolt. However the technology can be applied to other applications such as connecting rod bolts as well.